Implement Effective Customer Service MetricsBenchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
by Ian JacobsApril 11, 2016
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Key takeawaysDifferent Stakeholders Have Different Needs And Uses For Metricsexecutives need strategic KpIs to prove the business case for good customer service operations, while operational managers need to gather more comprehensive metrics in near real time to make the right decisions about the management of service requests and of their workforce.
Align Customer Service Metrics With Company Metricscompanies must measure operational success by tracking KpIs that align with business goals and measure the success of customer service operations by tracking metrics that align with the company’s strategy. Using a Balanced scorecard helps organizations pragmatically balance the cost of operations with customer satisfaction.
Customize Metrics That Are right For Your BusinessDon’t rely on predefined activity metrics that customer service software tools provide, as they represent vendors’ best guesses at the measures that you need. Use these metrics as a starting point to help guide the definition of metrics that are valuable for you to track.
Why read this reportcustomer service managers can easily become distracted by the sheer volume of metrics available for tracking operational activities and fail to deliver on key business goals. to keep customer service operations focused, managers should develop a Balanced scorecard of key performance indicators (KpIs). this report defines nearly 40 operational metrics for tracking contact center KpIs to help application development and delivery (AD&D) professionals focus on the ones that will move the needle.
this report was last published on April 3, 2015; Forrester reviews and updates it periodically for continued relevance and accuracy. For this version, we’ve added new data and customer examples.
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table of contents
Focus On Metrics That Matter
start By Focusing on metrics that meet stakeholder needs
Use A systematic Approach to establish the right contact center measurements
Apply Both explicit And Inferred metrics For customer satisfaction
treat self-service metrics With the same care As contact center metrics
Build A Balanced Scorecard To Track Success
recommendations
Remember: Metrics Management Is Also About People And Process
Supplemental Material
notes & resources
this report is part of Forrester’s contact centers for customer service playbook.
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Implement Effective Customer Service MetricsBenchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
by Ian Jacobswith patti Freeman evans, Kate leggett, meredith cain, and peter Harrison
April 11, 2016
For ApplicAtion Development & Delivery proFessionAls
Implement Effective Customer Service MetricsApril 11, 2016
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
Focus on metrics that matter
AD&D professionals responsible for contact center applications as part of their business technology agenda face the constant challenge of understanding technology performance.1 However, no single metric perfectly measures the success of customer service. this is because customer service, whether you deliver it via agents in contact centers or via voice or web self-service, typically requires a range of potentially competing activities. For example, common measures for customer service organizations in many industries include cost, customer satisfaction, revenue generation, and policy and regulatory compliance (see Figure 1).
FIGUrE 1 customer service operations track success With A Balanced scorecard of metrics
Cost
Revenue
Customereffort
(inferred)
Compliance
Customereffort
(explicit)
Start By Focusing on Metrics That Meet Stakeholder Needs
choosing the right set of metrics also depends on stakeholders who regularly demand insight into the performance of customer service operations. these stakeholders include the customer service leaders who run the contact center, as they have operational responsibilities, and executive management, which must make workforce and technology investment decisions for customer service or contact center operations that align with corporate goals. each stakeholder has different primary job functions, and the types of metrics that are important to each reflect this:
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
› Customer service leaders need operational data; execs want strategic KPIs. customer service leaders focus on operational metrics that track activities in near real time, whereas executive management focuses on strategic KpIs — often in the form of executive dashboards — that track the business results of customer service programs.
› Customer service leaders need lots of data; execs need a few key measurements. customer service managers need granular, real-time operational data that enables them to fix problems, better manage out-of-compliance service requests, and exploit opportunities that arise. therefore, they require large volumes of data at a high frequency. conversely, executive management may only need to see a handful of KpIs periodically.
Use A Systematic Approach To Establish The right Contact Center Measurements
contact center metrics for customer service measure how effectively customer service agents resolve customer inquiries: over the phone; via text-based interactions such as email, chat, or sms; on social channels such as Facebook and twitter; and over any other communication channel that involves interaction with an agent. choosing the right metrics for your contact center is a two-step process in which you must:
› Understand your company’s strategic objectives. choose high-level KpIs for your contact center that support your company’s strategy (see Figure 2). these are the metrics that you will report to executive management.
› Choose the right operational activity metrics. select metrics for your contact center that map to your KpIs. customer service leaders should use these on a daily basis to manage operations. ensure that you understand exactly what these operational metrics measure (see Figure 3). Be wary of mistaking quantity for quality; not every seemingly important metric will actually map neatly to your company’s KpIs.
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
FIGUrE 2 Align contact center Key performance Indicators With operational metrics
Key performance indicators measuring service outcomes Operational metrics measuring activities
Agentproductivity
metrics
• Cost of service • Average handle time• Average talk time• Dead air percentage• Number of cases handled• Number of holds per call• Agent turnover• Agent training time to pro�ciency
Serviceoperations
metrics
• Conversion ratio• Cross-sell/upsell revenue generated• Number of product upgrades• Fines or penalties incurred
• Contact load: forecast versus actual• Contact volume by communication channel• Average contact value• Policy/regulatory compliance• Schedule adherence• Shrinkage• Service level• Service-level agreement adherence• Escalation rate to second-tier support• Number of contact transfers• Abandon rate• Average speed of answer
Customersatisfaction
metrics
• Net Promoter Score• Customer effort score (explicit)• Customer effort (inferred)• Customer lifetime value• Customer retention• Likelihood to recommend• Reluctance to switch brands
• First-contact resolution• Recontact rate• Contact quality• Post-contact survey results• Number of holds during a call• Social posts and sentiment analysis
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
FIGUrE 3 operational metrics For the contact center Defined
Metric Definition
Abandon rate Ratio of interactions where customers hung up or failed to continue theinteraction before reaching an agent
Agent training time to pro�ciency Time required for the agent to be fully pro�cient from date of hire
Agent turnover and training Rate at which agents turn over on the job and length of training for agentsto become pro�cient at their job
Average contact value Ratio of the total revenue that the contact center generated and thenumber of contacts
Average handle time Average duration of an interaction with an agent, typically measured fromthe customer’s initiation of the call and includes hold time, talk time, andpost-call work
Average speed of answer Average amount of time it took to answer all contacts in a given period;also called average seconds to answer or average time to answer
Average talk time Average amount of time the agent spent communicating with thecustomer
Contact quality Quality of an interaction with an agent as measured by the timeliness,accuracy, completeness, and relevance of the answer a customer received
Contact volume bycommunication channel
Number of contacts over each communication channel (telephone, email,chat, SMS, etc.)
Conversion ratio Ratio of contacts with prospects that have converted a prospect to acustomer
Dead air percentage Amount of dead air time during a call; attributed to the agent searchingfor information to resolve a customer’s question
Escalation to second-tier support Ratio of interactions transferred to second-tier support agents
First-contact resolution Ratio of interactions where issues were resolved by an agent or viaself-service on �rst contact
Customer retention Number of customer win-backs (customers who defected and then re-engaged with the company)
Customer effort (inferred) Ease of resolving a customer request; based on interactionsystem data
Forecast contact load compared with actual contact load; measuressatisfaction and cost
Contact load: forecast versusactual
Customer effort score (explicit) Ease of resolving a customer request; based on customer survey
Apply Both Explicit And Inferred Metrics For Customer Satisfaction
over the past four years, customer service professionals have begun looking closely at the concept of customer effort. starting in 2010, a series of articles in the Harvard Business review discussed the idea of — and need for — a customer effort score. since then, many AD&D pros have built survey
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
functionality to capture this metric.2 they typically base scores on the answer to a single question. Although the wording of the question varies from company to company, it typically focuses on how much effort the customer personally had to expend to get his or her request resolved.
the Harvard Business review articles concluded that delighting customers may be a waste of time; customers simply want their issues resolved with minimal effort. But simply asking customers about the effort they expended does not give companies actionable information on the specific sources of friction that cause higher effort. the same principle broadly applies to customer satisfaction — companies need to know what drives or hinders it. AD&D pros looking to get an understanding of customer effort and customer satisfaction levels and their sources should combine:
› Explicit metrics. surveying customers immediately following interactions captures the customer’s mood and allows firms to follow up with unhappy customers — for example, with outbound communications that attempt to discern the cause of the dissatisfaction or the friction at the point of service.
› Inferred metrics. AD&D pros can infer customer effort by looking at how often customers were transferred from one agent to another, whether the customer had to escalate from one channel to another, and whether the customer needed to repeat information they had already provided. this inferred method allows firms to focus their improvement efforts on these base causes of higher effort and lower satisfaction. then they can use these metrics to develop hypotheses about what causes friction and test those hypotheses by comparing predicted outcomes with the data from the customer surveys. When those hypotheses prove true, fix the identified problems. When those hypotheses do not pan out, adjust the hypotheses, and compare the next batch of interactions to the explicit metrics.
Treat Self-Service Metrics With The Same Care As Contact Center Metrics
self-service metrics for customer service measure how effectively customers receive answers to their questions using a communication channel that doesn’t involve interacting with customer service agents. these interactions include searching a customer-facing knowledge base for answers; receiving an automated response from an interactive voice response (Ivr) system or a virtual agent; and receiving an automated response from an email, chat, or sms response management system. self-service interactions:
› Will succeed if you provide effortless, easy service. Fifty-three percent of Us online adults we surveyed said that they are very likely to abandon a purchase if they cannot find a quick answer to a question; 73% agreed that valuing their time is the most important thing that a company can do to provide good online customer service.3 effortless service requires close attention to ensuring that the website or Ivr is highly usable; that its navigation is intuitive; that it is easy to locate the answer to a question without friction; and that complete, relevant, and accurate content that fully answers customer questions is readily available.
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
› Will fail if customers can’t find what they’re looking for. Failed self-service interactions are those that customers abandon because they can’t navigate an Ivr or a web self-service site or cannot easily locate the right answer in a set of search results and resort to escalating their question to an agent. An example of this would be searching the web self-service site for an answer, not finding information relevant to the specific issue at hand, and having to request assistance from an agent via a chat session or a phone call.
› require specific metrics to evaluate success or failure. choose the right metrics for your customer service operations using the same two-step process as for contact center metrics. First, understand your company’s strategic objectives, and choose high-level customer self-service KpIs that support the company’s objectives (see Figure 4). then choose self-service operational metrics that align with the KpIs you will use to manage self-service operations on a daily basis. there are operational metrics that pertain specifically to self-service operations; be sure to understand exactly what they measure (see Figure 5).
FIGUrE 4 Align self-service Key performance Indicators With operational metrics
Customer effort score (explicit) Ease of resolving a customer request; based on a customersurvey
Metric Definition
Abandon rate Ratio of self-service interactions that customers abandoned midcourse;indicator of poor usability of self-service implementations
Average contact value Ratio of the total revenue that a self-service implementation generatedand the number of contacts
Contact de�ection Ratio of incoming self-service interactions that were successful comparedwith total self-service and agent-assisted contacts
Content vitality Number of self-service solutions created, modi�ed, and deleted within atime frame; indicator of the ability to align self-service content withcustomers’ changing needs
Conversion ratio Ratio of contacts with prospects that have converted a prospect to acustomer
Customer effort (inferred) Ease of resolving a customer request; based on interactionsystem data (Was the call transferred to another agent? Was the customerforced to repeat information at any point?)
Customer retention Number of customer win-backs (customers who defected and then re-engaged with the company)
Escalation to agent-assistedcommunication channels
Ratio of self-service interactions that have been escalated for handling bycustomer service agents
Number of product upgrades Measure of the number of product upgrades per customer, which is anindication of the loyalty of a customer to the product purchased
Policy/regulatory compliance Rate at which self-service interaction work�ows comply with company orregulatory policy; noncompliant work�ows are often associated with�nes or penalties
Quality of answer Quality, as measured by the accuracy, completeness, and relevance of theself-service answer the customer received
Recontact rate Number of times the customer had to revisit the voice or web self-serviceapplication to resolve the issue at hand
Relevance of response Accuracy, completeness, and relevance of the answer a customerobtained via a self-service interaction
Self-service interactionsyielding no results
Ratio of self-service interactions that failed to locate the relevant answerto a question; indicator of content gaps in self-service implementations
Self-service survey results Measure of customer satisfaction as expressed in a survey right after aself-service interaction
Social posts and sentimentanalysis
Capture of customer sentiment trends, which can surface behaviorpatterns, and causes of issues that in�uence customer satisfaction
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
FIGUrE 5 operational metrics For self-service Defined
Customer effort score (explicit) Ease of resolving a customer request; based on a customersurvey
Metric Definition
Abandon rate Ratio of self-service interactions that customers abandoned midcourse;indicator of poor usability of self-service implementations
Average contact value Ratio of the total revenue that a self-service implementation generatedand the number of contacts
Contact de�ection Ratio of incoming self-service interactions that were successful comparedwith total self-service and agent-assisted contacts
Content vitality Number of self-service solutions created, modi�ed, and deleted within atime frame; indicator of the ability to align self-service content withcustomers’ changing needs
Conversion ratio Ratio of contacts with prospects that have converted a prospect to acustomer
Customer effort (inferred) Ease of resolving a customer request; based on interactionsystem data (Was the call transferred to another agent? Was the customerforced to repeat information at any point?)
Customer retention Number of customer win-backs (customers who defected and then re-engaged with the company)
Escalation to agent-assistedcommunication channels
Ratio of self-service interactions that have been escalated for handling bycustomer service agents
Number of product upgrades Measure of the number of product upgrades per customer, which is anindication of the loyalty of a customer to the product purchased
Policy/regulatory compliance Rate at which self-service interaction work�ows comply with company orregulatory policy; noncompliant work�ows are often associated with�nes or penalties
Quality of answer Quality, as measured by the accuracy, completeness, and relevance of theself-service answer the customer received
Recontact rate Number of times the customer had to revisit the voice or web self-serviceapplication to resolve the issue at hand
Relevance of response Accuracy, completeness, and relevance of the answer a customerobtained via a self-service interaction
Self-service interactionsyielding no results
Ratio of self-service interactions that failed to locate the relevant answerto a question; indicator of content gaps in self-service implementations
Self-service survey results Measure of customer satisfaction as expressed in a survey right after aself-service interaction
Social posts and sentimentanalysis
Capture of customer sentiment trends, which can surface behaviorpatterns, and causes of issues that in�uence customer satisfaction
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
Build A Balanced scorecard to track success
managers can use a wide array of predefined metrics to optimize their operations and communicate KpIs to executives. But just tracking a lot of metrics does not result in better performance. to select the metrics that will affect your operations, be certain to choose those that form a Balanced scorecard of complementary metrics so you’re not measuring operations on a single dimension, such as cost, with no regard for revenue or satisfaction. In addition, be sure to:
› Align activities with outcomes. If you are measuring and optimizing an activity metric that you cannot map directly to a KpI, it is likely to be of secondary importance.
› Customize the metrics to ensure that they are right for your business. the predefined activity metrics that customer service software tools provide represent vendors’ best guesses at the measures that you need — without regard for industry, geography, or organizational culture. think of these metrics as starting points — the raw materials from which you can create metrics that are meaningful for your business. For example, don’t just track handle time; if your contact centers also have revenue targets, track the dollars per minute above the average handle time.
› Analyze metrics against varying time frames. sometimes, overall metrics look good while actual metrics over shorter time intervals tell a different story. For example, daily handle-time metrics may align with operational goals but can hide large hourly fluctuations that point to staffing challenges. ensure that you measure metrics over a short enough time frame that they don’t hide the details of your operations.
› report metrics by communication channel. phone metrics, email metrics, Ivr metrics, social media metrics, and web self-service metrics are not the same. choose metrics that make sense for the communication channels you support. expect to see a high-level correlation between metrics and outcomes from different communication channels. For example, see if customers have the same satisfaction ratings or first-handle rates in each communication channel. When differences surface, dig deep to find and fix the underlying root cause, which is often the result of broken processes within channels.
› Use metrics that resonate with your audience. create a language bridge between activities and outcomes to make a business case for programs that will influence activity metrics. For example, a customer service manager could frame a request to add headcount to a knowledge management program this way: “We need to evolve our knowledge management solution to improve the quality of the knowledge we provide to our agents. this will ultimately lead to a measurable increase in our net promoter score, an increase in the first-time fix rate, and lower operating costs.”4
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
recommendations
remember: metrics management Is Also About people And process
to get the most from customer service metrics as an application development and delivery professional, you should:
› Communicate your business goals, KPIs, and operational metrics. Good KpIs help executive management understand the value of customer service operations. Associated activity metrics help managers make decisions about hiring, scheduling, and operational processes that ultimately align with the company’s business goals. eliminate confusion over conflicting goals and priorities by ensuring that the entire customer service staff understands the metrics and how they tie to business outcomes.
› Drill down into metrics to optimize your business. tracking activity metrics and KpIs will not inherently improve them. to make improvements, you need to analyze the root causes of the measurements and solve the underlying issues.
› Don’t neglect the human factor. Good customer service is the result of good technology, good customer service processes, and — most importantly — a well-managed organization that values its employees. pay attention to the human factors such as training, compensation, authority to make decisions, and career planning to ensure that your agents deliver to expectations. After all, your agents are the key to your success.
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
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supplemental material
Survey Methodology
For Forrester’s north American consumer technographics® customer life cycle survey 2, 2015, Forrester conducted an online survey fielded in July 2015 of 4,485 Us individuals ages 18 to 88. For results based on a randomly chosen sample of this size, there is 95% confidence that the results have a statistical precision of plus or minus 1.5% of what they would be if the entire population of Us online adults (defined as those online weekly or more often) had been surveyed. Forrester weighted the data by age, gender, income, broadband adoption, and region to demographically represent the adult Us online population. the survey sample size, when weighted, was 4,473. (note: Weighted sample sizes can be different from the actual number of respondents to account for individuals generally underrepresented in online panels.) please note that respondents who participate in online surveys generally have more experience with the Internet and feel more comfortable transacting online.
endnotes1 Business technology (Bt) brings together technology and traditionally customer-facing roles like marketing, sales,
service, brand/product management, and fulfillment to deliver superior (digital) customer experience. see the “the cIo mandate: engaging customers With Business technology” Forrester report.
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Benchmarks: The Contact Centers For Customer Service Playbook
2 source: matthew Dixon, Karen Freeman, and nicholas toman, “stop trying to Delight your customers,” Harvard Business review, July 2010 (https://hbr.org/2010/07/stop-trying-to-delight-your-customers).
source: matthew Dixon, lara ponomareff, and Anastasia milgramm, “stop trying to Delight your customers: the Idea in practice,” Harvard Business review, January 23, 2012 (https://hbr.org/2012/01/stop-trying-to-delight-your-cu).
For more on the impact the idea of reducing customer effort will have on customer service technologies, see the “Demands For effortless service must Influence your customer strategy” Forrester report.
3 source: Forrester’s north American consumer technographics customer life cycle survey 2, 2015.
4 net promoter and nps are registered service marks, and net promoter score is a service mark, of Bain & company, Inc., satmetrix systems, Inc., and Fred reichheld.
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